Hello everyone and Merry Christmas!
Still dreaming of a buffalo safari, so I was wondering if buffaloes are all the same throughout Africa?
body size, trophy size, behavior, aggressiveness, etc.
Greetings from Spain to everyone
Merry Christmas VINOYASADO -
I understood your question a little differently, and will answer it that way as well. The vast majority of all buffalo hunted in Africa are “cape buffalo”, with Nile and forest buffalo subspecies mostly being the realm of specialty collectors. It’s similar to how more greater kudu are hunted than many of the other spiral horns (lesser kudu, mountain nyala, sitatunga etc) combined.
Similar to how whitetail deer vary in different areas of North America, there is some regional variations of buffalo. While this is almost sure to start controversy, I’ll share the following of what I’ve heard from PHs or experienced as it relates to “cape buffalo” (which are just called “buffalo” in most of East Africa)
- Some of the buffalo from the Kruger park area are known for really large bosses, but not quite the width found elsewhere. There is an “addo” gene population that is known for great mass and bosses, but less width.
- Some really, really wide buffalo come from northern Tanzania in general and the area east of Lake Manyara specifically.
- I had a very experienced PH swear to me that the Masailand buffalo are larger and “denser” in the body - ie literally weigh more for the volume displaced (more muscle, less fat?)?
- The Masailand buffalo have a reputation for being particularly ornery.
- The older buffalo I’ve seen in the Zambezi delta in Mozambique tend not to have the horn tips worn down and broken off like I’ve seen elsewhere. I think there is simply less for them to “broom” against in the large marshes and swamps.
- In contrast, the buffalo from the Lukwati area in Tanzania almost always have smoothly polished horns.
I hope this helps and you have a wonderful Christmas in Andalusia.
I’m interested in what regional traits others have learned in this regard, while recognizing there are exceptions along the way.